Lufthansa canceled my flight a year ago. Where’s my $3,450 refund?

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By Christopher Elliott

When Lufthansa cancels Nancy Plasschaert’s flight, her online agency offers her a full refund. But almost a year later, the airline is still holding onto her $3,450. How can she get her money back?

Question

I booked four Lufthansa tickets from Brussels to San Francisco through Kiwi.com in 2021. Lufthansa canceled the flight. Kiwi.com offered to request a refund. We have received two automated responses so far, but no refund.

I have not yet contacted Lufthansa directly since Kiwi.com is our online travel agency. It’s been a year since Kiwi promised to help us get a refund. Can you help us get our $3,450 back, please?  — Nancy Plasschaert, Antwerpen, Belgium

Answer

You should have received a refund almost immediately. Under Lufthansa’s general conditions, the legal contract between you and the airline, “in the event of a cancellation, rebooking or delay, a reimbursement of the fare may be possible under certain conditions.” And you met those conditions, which Kiwi.com verified.

You should have received your money back within a week. But Lufthansa would not refund you directly. It would send it to Kiwi.com, which would then pass the money along to you. So what happened?

I asked Kiwi if the holdup was on the Lufthansa side or if the agency had experienced a delay. It did not respond. This isn’t the first complaint we’ve received about Lufthansa.

Your case illustrates one of the drawbacks of using an online travel agency. The intermediary can protect you when things go wrong. But that third party can also cause delays, which would have happened to you even if Lufthansa had refunded you immediately. Kiwi warned you that you might have to wait months for your money.

“Please be patient,” it told you in an email. “We estimate that some refunds will take approximately three months. However, many carriers are now delaying their refund processes, and in some cases, the waiting time might be longer.”

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Why so long? Well, part of it may be related to the pandemic — although that excuse is getting a little old. By then, Lufthansa was close to two years into the pandemic and should have figured out a way to streamline its refunds. 

At some point, you should have reached out directly to Lufthansa to ask for your money. I would have reached that point after about a month. You lasted almost a year, encouraged by Kiwi’s promises.

Here’s what I would have done: After a month, I would have sent a brief, polite email to one of the executive contacts for Lufthansa that I publish on this site.

Failing that, I would have filed a dispute with your credit card company. Your bank or credit card could have taken the money back if you had shown them the email from Kiwi.com. A dispute department would have seen that promise as a credit memo and returned all of your money.

You reached out to my consumer advocacy organization. I contacted Kiwi on your behalf. A representative responded immediately and promised to look into your refund. But two weeks later, there was no sign of your money. So I reached out again. This time, a representative got in touch with you and refunded your $3,450. “The process got delayed due to still unprocessed refund from the airline side,” a Kiwi representative told me.

So should you have booked a trip with Kiwi.com? We don’t get a lot of complaints about the company — so few that we don’t even list their company contacts on our advocacy site. But I note that the company advertises itself as an agency that likes to “hack the system.” Maybe next time, it can hack the system and get you a faster refund.

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Christopher Elliott

Christopher Elliott is the founder of Elliott Advocacy, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that empowers consumers to solve their problems and helps those who can't. He's the author of numerous books on consumer advocacy and writes three nationally syndicated columns. He also publishes the Elliott Report, a news site for consumers, and Elliott Confidential, a critically acclaimed newsletter about customer service. If you have a consumer problem you can't solve, contact him directly through his advocacy website. You can also follow him on X, Facebook, and LinkedIn, or sign up for his daily newsletter. He is based in Panamá City.

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